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Stieff
General Helmuth Stieff (born 6 June 1901 in Deutsch Eylau
(now Iława, Poland); died 8
August 1944 in Berlin) was a member of the OKH (German Army General Staff) during World War II. more...
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He
took part in attempts by the German resistance to assassinate Hitler, on July 7 and on July 20, 1944.
He graduated at Infanterieschule München in 1922 and was commissioned as Leutnant. As soon as
1927 he served for the General Staff of the Reichswehr. Stieff joined the General Staff in 1938.
Recognized for his excellent organizational skills he was appointed Chief of Organization at OKH headquarters in October
1942 in spite of Hitler's personal dislike for him, calling the young, diminutive Stieff a
\"poisonous little dwarf.\"
During the war, e.g. when in Warsaw in November 1939, Stieff wrote many letters to his wife
illustrating his disgust and despair over Hitler's conduct of the war and the atrocities committed in Poland.
Asked by Henning von Tresckow, he joined the Widerstand. Taking advantage of
being in charge of \"Organisationsabteilung\", he could acquire (\"organisieren\") and keep all sorts of explosives, including
foreign ones.
As others who had occasional access to Hitler, he volunteered to kill Hitler in suicide attacks, but later backed away and
refused repeated requests from Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg to more
actively support other assassination attempts. On 7 July 1944, during a weapons exhibition at Schloss Klessheim palace near Salzburg, Stieff lacked the courage to
trigger the bomb.
Stieff was arrested on July 21, 1944 at the Wolf's Lair
and brutally interrogated under torture. He held out for several days against all attempts to
extract the names of fellow conspirators. Tried by the Volksgerichtshof
(People's Court), he was sentenced to death August 8, 1944 and executed the same day in Plötzensee prison in Berlin.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
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